Vogel v. City of Vinita

1934 OK 516, 39 P.2d 94, 170 Okla. 235, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 9, 1934
Docket23213
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1934 OK 516 (Vogel v. City of Vinita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogel v. City of Vinita, 1934 OK 516, 39 P.2d 94, 170 Okla. 235, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 729 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

F. C. Vogel, W. H. Vogel, and Page Crahan, individually and as executor of the estate of P. H. Crahan, deceased, appeal from a judgment rendered in the court below against them as sureties on a certain bond.

In the latter part of 1929 the city of Vinita, through its city treasurer, began to deposit moneys in the Farmers State Bank of Vinita, ana continued to make and carry certain deposits therein until the bank was closed by the State Banking Department in May, 1930, at which time the bank was adjudicated as insolvent and was taken over by the Bank Commissioner of the state.

At the time the bank was closed the city had a balance in checking account in the sum of $1S.04, and held a time certificate of deposit of $15,000. The bank held certain offsets in the form of obligations of the city, which were charged by the commissioner against the deposits, and certain dividends were declared and paid, and in the trial court a judgment was obtained for $12,144.42, with interest at the rate of six per cent, from the first day of October, 1930, until paid, with costs of action against the bank and against sureties, W. H. Vogel, F. O. Vogel, and Page Crahan, individually and as executor of the estate of P. H. Crahan, deceased; the judgment providing if further dividends be paid, such amounts should be applied by plaintiff in the reduction of the judgment rendered against the sureties. The record does not disclose the payment of any subsequent dividends.

From the case-made it appears that the $15,000 for which a time certificate of deposit was received, represented uninvested sinking funds of the city of Vinita. in the hands of its tresaurer, upon deposit in the bank. The funds represented by the certificate had previously been on deposit in an open account in the bank. It further appears that prior to the execution of the bond in question, the city had average deposits of about $50,000 in the bank and the treasurer was directed by the mayor and councilmen to secure a bond from tiie bank indemnifying the city against loss from such deposits. A bond in the sum of $50,-000 was prepared by the officers of the bank and was executed by the bank and by the various sureties, all of whom were either officers, directors, or stockholders in the bank. The conditions of the bond which are essential to the determination of the issues in this case recite that:

“Whereas, the city of Vinita, state of Oklahoma, has designated the Farmers State Bank of Vinita, Okla., as the depository for the purpose of receiving from the city treasurer of the city of Vinita, Okla., funds in her hands as such city treasurer,
“Now, therefore, if the said Farmers State Bank of Vinita, Okla., shall promptly pay on the check or draft of the city treasurer of Vinita, Okla., any and all moneys that may be deposited in said bank as such depository, then this obligation shall be void; otherwise, to be in full force and effect.”

*237 After the failure of the bank, the city brought its suit upon the bond, and the defendant F. 0. Vogel, by proper pleading, denied execution of the bond.

The other defendants admitted execution thereof and pleaded various defenses, among others that the bond was a contract of suretyship which is plain, clear, concise, understandable, and unambiguous, and that the sureties were gratuitous sureties and not sureties for hire, and that the obligation of the bond should be construed strictly according to its terms and in the most favorable light to the sureties, and that the bond plainly stated that it was one of indemnity only, covering refusal or neglect to pay promptly on the check or draft of the city treasurer upon such accounts as were subject to cheek or draft, and that a certificate of time deposit is not within the terms of the bond for the reason it is not a deposit, subject to check or draft, but is in effect a loan to the bank, where the relation of debtor and creditor exists thereby.

The city in the court below, and in this court likewise, insists that the terms of the bond must be construed by the court, and that the same are clear, concise, unambiguous, and understandable, and contended and now contends that the rules of construction applicable are those applying to sureties for hire, because each surety was interested as an officer, director, or stockholder of the bank, and the bond was given for a public purpose, to wit, the protection of public funds, and that by its plain terms clearly covered all deposits made by the city treasurer in the bank, and that a time deposit, while in the nature of a loan to the bank, still remains a deposit within the meaning of such bonds.

At the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict against the bank and against each of the sureties other than F. 0. Vogel, and submitted the cause to the jury as to F. 0. Vogel, upon the single issue of whether or not he had signed the bond, and directed the jury that in the event they so found that he had signed such bond, their verdict should be against the bank and against each surety sued, for the amount of $12,144.42, with interest. The jury returned its verdict against all of the defendants, including F. C. Vogel, and the sureties appeal.

The only propositions submitted to this court upon the appeal by the plaintiffs in error are that they are gratuitous sureties, and, as such, are favorites of the law, and that the contract must be strictly construed in their favor as against any burdens other than those clearly within the meaning of the contract, and that the contract cannot be extended by implication or presumption, and that by such construction the moneys represented by the time certificates are not within the terms of the bond in that they were not subject to payment on check or draft. By the laws of Oklahoma, a city treasurer is specifically authorized and commended to make a deposit of all uninvested sinking fund money in designated depositories, furnishing security, and upon not less than 3 per cent, interest, and such statutes also provide. that nothing in the act shall be construed to prohibit depositor from drawing out any and all such sinking fund money at any time that he can invest same or any part thereof in securities provided by law for the investment of such moneys. The statutes do not define the kind or character of the deposit to be made, whether by way of open account, savings account or certificates of deposit. Sections 8577, 8579 and 8516, C. O. S. 1921, as amended by chapter 62, S. L. 1925.

We agree with the plaintiffs in error that if each of them be held sureties for hire and their obligation is liberally construed, such construction must not be enlarged beyond the scope of the terms of the contract, and the intelligible meaning of the language of the bond must be ascertained without enlargement by implication, U. S. F. & G, Co. v. Gray, 106 Okla. 222, 233 P. 731; Fuqua v. Tulsa Masonic Building Association, 129 Okla. 106, 263 P. 660; but we must not overlook the fact that the bond in question was prepared by the officers of the bank, choosing their own language and sub-i mitting it for approval to the city, and we are obliged to hold that these sureties were not gratuitous sureties. In drafting the bond the officers of the bank could, if they had so intended, have used language which would leave no doubt under their present contention that the bond was meant to

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 516, 39 P.2d 94, 170 Okla. 235, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogel-v-city-of-vinita-okla-1934.